Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Gunnar mine cleanup cost ballooning

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URANIUM CITY The total price tag was estimated at under $25 million when the federal government agreed to pay for half the cleanup of a radioactiv­e Cold-War-era uranium mine in northern Saskatchew­an.

But a decade later, the expected cost for remediatio­n of the remote Gunnar mine has swelled to about 10 times that and Ottawa isn’t offering any more money, even as the province starts this summer to remediate millions of tonnes of tailings and waste rock left when the mine closed in 1964.

“With Gunnar, just the size of the waste-rock piles and the tailings area alone, it’s fairly unavoidabl­e that costs were significan­tly more,” said Cory Hughes, executive director of mineral policy at the Saskatchew­an Ministry of the Economy.

“You really have to be there to appreciate the size of the project.”

The Gunnar mine near Uranium City opened in 1955. The federal, Crown-operated Eldorado Mining and Refining Corp. supplied refined uranium yellowcake that was an essential ingredient for U.S. atomic weapons.

Over the course of its operation, the mine produced 4.4 million tonnes of tailings and 2.2 million tonnes of waste rock. It also left behind an open pit more than 100 metres deep.

Canada officially stopped exporting uranium for weapons production in 1965.

The Gunnar pit was flooded with water from Lake Athabasca when the mine closed and the tailings and waste rock were left to the elements. Dust blew in the wind and rain and run-off drained over the tailings and into the lake.

The Crown’s mining and surface rights lapsed in 1990 and the property reverted to the Saskatchew­an government. In 2006, Saskatchew­an and Natural Resources Canada agreed to share the remediatio­n costs, although the province would be responsibl­e for building demolition.

The estimated cost was $24.6 million over 17 years.

“Really, the original estimate is a starting point to get the ball rolling,” explained Ian Wilson with the Saskatchew­an Research Council, which has been contracted to do the cleanup.

Over the last decade, detailed environmen­tal impact studies have been completed, public consultati­ons have been held and regulatory hurdles of the Canadian Nuclear Safety Council have been cleared.

Wilson said preliminar­y work to build roads for crews has already started and workers are to begin using waste rock to cover the tailings this summer.

The work so far hasn’t been cheap. A Natural Resources Canada report from 2012 said the buildings, some of which contained asbestos, cost $20 million to tear down. Heavy equipment has to travel to the site in winter on an ice road.

The job is expected to take three to four years.

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